In March 2000 a bipartisan Constituency Boundaries Commission recommended that the number of constituencies in St. Lucia be increased from 17 to 19 before the next general election in 2002.

Following unflattering observations about St. Lucia’s financial services sector from the Financial Stability Forum and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the government moved in September to improve the country’s offshore-banking image. St. Lucia requested that the International Monetary Fund make an “assessment” of the supervisory regime for offshore activities. Phillip Pierre, the minister for financial services, hoped that the IMF findings would “throw a spanner in the work of the OECD,” which, he believed, was trying to “cripple the financial services sector in the Caribbean.”

Vaughn Lewis, leader of the opposition United Workers’ Party, resigned unexpectedly in early October, only days after he was nominated (unopposed) for reelection. He cited that his work with the University of the West Indies would take him abroad most of the time. Morella Joseph, one of two deputy political leaders, was elected party leader.

On December 31 two men attacked worshippers in a church in Castries and set them ablaze; the two also killed an Irish nun. They said they had been sent by God to fight corruption in the Roman Catholic Church.

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